I see it like this: Picard is not a flaw. Excluding First Contact, it's the TNG Movies that were the flaw. Picard is the correction.
Bingo!
I see it like this: Picard is not a flaw. Excluding First Contact, it's the TNG Movies that were the flaw. Picard is the correction.
We'll deal with those issues when we come to them.Yeah, like that random dude who was expelled from Starfleet Academy because of a dumb mistake and decided to give himself a second chance, so he went back to prevent his past self from committing that mistake... which leads to him graduating from the Academy and eventually being assigned as the attaché of a certain Admiral Janeway, whom he later introduces to his cousin... the two fall in love and get married, which leads to Janeway not meeting the woman who would give birth to his daughter Kathryn, which leads to the USS Voyager being commanded by a captain who uses the Caretaker Array to get home, which leads to Species 8472 being able to exterminate the Borg then all sentient life in the galaxy because there was no USS Voyager there to stop them...
You can't assume that the actions of individual people cannot lead to major events in history, be it directly, or simply through a combination of minuscule changes adding up with X being distracted, thus missing a chance encounter with Y that leads to Z arriving on time to a crucial event they would've missed themselves and so on.
That's the exact problem! You wouldn't be dealing with the ripple effects of one single person's attempts to alter the timeline, but who knows how many millions of people all trying to change their own "insignificant" subjective pasts at once. How would you control that and maintain the integrity of the timeline? How would anyone be able to do it?We'll deal with those issues when we come to them.
How do you think the 31st century dealt with it?That's the exact problem! You wouldn't be dealing with the ripple effects of one single person's attempts to alter the timeline, but who knows how many millions of people all trying to change their own "insignificant" subjective pasts at once. How would you control that and maintain the integrity of the timeline? How would anyone be able to do it?
The problem is that you make assumptions about how time travel is used in the future based on a few lines of dialogue that are way too generic to extrapolate that way, and are also in direct violation of what we have learned from Voyager on the 29th century. At the end of Future's End, Braxton categorically refuses to return Voyager to 24th century Earth and specifically cites the Temporal Prime Directive as his reason for doing so.How do you think the 31st century dealt with it?
Because it wasn't until that century that Time Travel was so common amongst the civilian populace that Temporal Discriminators were everywhere, even in HighSchool desks according to Temporal Agent Daniels.
By that time, the UFP has had 500 years of Time Travel experience, countless new technologies that are in common, well developed use.
They had a proper Temporal Division that was wide spread, well trained, monitoring the entire timeline across Time & Space.
I'm sure there were regulations, escorts for chaperoning personal Time Travel missions, along with monitored missions for Time Travel.
People were allowed to use Temporal technologies, but it wasn't without certain restrictions, and definitely without involvement from the official Temporal Divisions to make sure things didn't go wrong.
In the 24th century, people had to charter space flights to go from Star System to Star System.
By the 26th century, General Space travel is available to the common civilian and AstroMobiles are as common as AutoMobiles are today.
The Transwarp Corridor Freeway Networks allow any average civilian with a AstroMobile to go FTL by taking a ride in the Government maintained Transwarp Corridors that are designed for civilian sized vessels of a certain size.
There are Public Use Warp Ferry Rings for rental for individual InterStellar Spelunking at FTL in your AstroMobile.
That's true, Braxton & Crew from the 29th century know exactly the impacts of what Janeway did, that's why her Time Travel was allowed to occur and is protected from getting reverted back.The problem is that you make assumptions about how time travel is used in the future based on a few lines of dialogue that are way too generic to extrapolate that way, and are also in direct violation of what we have learned from Voyager on the 29th century. At the end of Future's End, Braxton categorically refuses to return Voyager to 24th century Earth and specifically cites the Temporal Prime Directive as his reason for doing so.
Braxton was also the cause of the problem in the first place when he royally screwed things up the first time.Now, even if we concede that we don't know the actual wording of the Temporal Prime Directive, the mere name suggests it's a non-interference clause akin to the generic PD, with the past being treated as the "other culture" whose development should be left undisturbed. It's evidently not just the past of other civilizations, because Braxton specifically applies it to a Starfleet vessel, and will later serve as a basis for the arrest of his own future self that blamed Voyager for his being stranded in the 20th century and sought revenge on Janeway personally.
The Archaeologists covertly witnessing the construction of the Pyramids was part of regular controlled Time Travel from the 26th century.Nothing in what has been established about the pre-Burn future Federation suggests that time travel was regularly used to alter the past in a legal way, even if time travel itself was commonplace. We're talking about archeologists covertly witnessing the construction of the Pyramids, not high school students convincing Shakespeare to write raunchy jokes about their English teacher as a senior prank. The entire Temporal Cold War storyline in Enterprise was presented as the Federation trying to preserve the timeline against incursions made by outside actors. Allowing random people to alter that timeline, even in a limited and controlled manner, would destroy that entire purpose.
And future Time Travel would still have the Temporal Division in place across all of the UFP as well.You might raise the various time travel incidents involving Kirk, Picard and the like, but the majority of those were done in order to restore a timeline that had been previously altered (e.g. The City on the Edge of Forever, First Contact, Past Tense, Relativity), or in one case, brought back to the past together with the perpetrator and thwarted his attempt before he could've succeeded (Trials and Tribble-ations). The rest is few enough that they can be treated as exceptions rather than the rule, especially since they led to the existence of the timeline where the Federation can even be a position to safeguard the integrity of the timeline like that in the first place. Those incursions likely cannot be averted without catastrophic consequences. The whale probe would've destroyed Earth if not for Kirk bringing back George and Gracie, after all.
Emphasis mine. You aren't describing the society portrayed in Star Trek.The society I want to see, will be MUCH better for it thanks to Time Travel, especially validating critical time line events long into the future and making sure things go correctly.
Actually, my basis comes from what happens in Star Trek and the lines describing how time travel has progressed over time.Emphasis mine. You aren't describing the society portrayed in Star Trek.
And which part of the "lot more well known" states that Federation civilians in the future routinely and legally alter their own subjective pasts?Actually, my basis comes from what happens in Star Trek and the lines describing how time travel has progressed over time.
It's not like regular civilians gets to time travel early on. It wasn't until the 31st century, 500 years after common regulated time travel by the professionals in the UFP Government / StarFleet, that Time Travel came into some form for civilians.
By that time, ALOT more about the science of Time Travel is well known.
Temporal defenses are in place across and around the UFP.
Everything is highly regulated, controlled, planned.
Even then, civilians are very limited & monitored compared to the full set of temporal tools availabe to trained & certified professionals.
During the 31st century.And which part of the "lot more well known" states that Federation civilians in the future routinely and legally alter their own subjective pasts?
Daniels is born. By this time, time travel is so commonplace that there are quantum discriminators in every high school desk. (ENT: "Shockwave, Part II")
A quantum discriminator was a technology used for determining the precise moment in time to which a signal was to be sent when attempting to communicate through time. In the 31st century, quantum discriminators were located in students' desks in high school, for use in learning to construct such a communications device.
When the temporal agent named Daniels accidentally changed history by removing Jonathan Archer from the timeline, he managed to construct a device with which Archer could communicate with his crew in 2152, but experienced difficulty in contacting them on the same day which Archer initially left, due to the absence of a quantum discriminator. (ENT: "Shockwave, Part II")
Obviously, by the 31st century, Temporal Communicators are so common that every HS desk had one.A temporal communicator was a device which could be used to communicate with other time periods.
Temporal communications to inhabitants of an earlier time frame were considered dangerous to the integrity of time; they were prohibited by the Temporal Prime Directive in the Federation.
Communications from the future contributed to the Temporal Cold War, as future benefactors would send advantages and missions to be carried out by the Cabal.
In the 31st century, Federation temporal communicators were dependent on a component called a quantum discriminator. (ENT: "Shockwave, Part II")
But none of this means that people can certainly talk to anyone they wish in any time frame they want. Daniels and the Memory Alpha article never actually state who exactly these devices are being used to communicate with. For all we know, they are used to keep in contact with the observers who went back to the past from their own time with various specific applications, such as being able to bring them back instantly if they get in trouble, or they can send live footage from the past to be used a high school history class etc. but nowhere is it stated that people in the future routinely communicate with their own past selves.During the 31st century.
You wouldn't need Quantum Discriminators in every HS desk if low level Temporal communications wasn't a common thing.
Temporal Communication devices are common to the average HS student.
Imagine being able to talk to yourself in the past or future, how advantageous that would be.
Have you warched Star Trek? "Future's End", "Relativity" and "Shockwave" were all problems caused by the time police, which our heroes had to fix.Everything is highly regulated, controlled, planned.
That's why I extrapolated future details based on what's already established.But none of this means that people can certainly talk to anyone they wish in any time frame they want. Daniels and the Memory Alpha article never actually state who exactly these devices are being used to communicate with. For all we know, they are used to keep in contact with the observers who went back to the past from their own time with various specific applications, such as being able to bring them back instantly if they get in trouble, or they can send live footage from the past to be used a high school history class etc. but nowhere is it stated that people in the future routinely communicate with their own past selves.
I've seen most of Star Trek. And Yes I've watched all of those episodes and more.Have you warched Star Trek? "Future's End", "Relativity" and "Shockwave" were all problems caused by the time police, which our heroes had to fix.
It caused a century long war because outsiders (The Nakhul) decided to mess with Earth's history during WW2 because Earth is a Key player in the forming of the UFP.While I do find the idea of Daniels' 30th century fascinating, it would be utter chaos. Saying it caused a century-long war (which led to such things as an alternate WWII with alien Nazis in the White House, again a thing our heroes had to fix) and all the tech was wiped out and banned afterwards definitely works for me as a means to sweep it under the rug.
"Every now and then?" They screwed up every time we see them and have always needed people from several hundred years in their past to step in and fix their mistakes for them. Worse yet, those screw-ups almost always result in the eradication of their own society.Just because the "Time Police" screw up every now and then. The important part is that they realized that they screwed up and they go back to fix it.
How often do Police Screw Up IRL?"Every now and then?" They screwed up every time we see them and have always needed people from several hundred years in their past to step in and fix their mistakes for them. Worse yet, those screw-ups almost always result in the eradication of their own society.
To put it in perspective, imagine we had time travel today and the time travel authority caused an incident which resulted in the destruction of the modern world and the time travel authority had to turn to people from 16th or 12th century to fix the problem for them. Who would actually feel comfortable in such a world?
Yet here we are, society is fixed, & Star Trek keeps going on.Apples and oranges. When the Timecops screw up, their entire society gets eradicated and people who as backward to them as Vikings are to us have to step in and do their job for them. That does not inspire confidence at all. At least when a modern day police officer or pilot screw up the world doesn't end and several hundred years worth of history is not erased, nor are Vikings stepping in to fix their mistakes for them.
I still fail to understand how restricting communications to talking to your past self carries no risks to the overall timeline. Because it isn't about "oh, you're just a random civilian, your life being changed doesn't affect the timeline on a larger scale" but rather that tiny little happenstance events can and will add up until the mere fact of telling your teenage self something they weren't supposed to know yet could end up with the Enterprise having a different captain or a presidential candidate who would've otherwise won the election deciding to withdraw simply because your teenage self would make a different decision that would affect another person that would affect a third and so on. Annorax's crew in Year of Hell had to be specially trained to calculate the effects of any kind of interference with the timeline, because altering something that appears insignificant (e.g. deleting a random comet) could end up causing several parsecs worth of space not to be seeded with sentient life. There's a reason why the "time traveler moves a chair" meme is that popular.That's why I extrapolated future details based on what's already established.
And I limited temporal communications to ones own personal self and not to others.
That's part of the whole regulation and control.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.